immolation. He looked on helplessly as Lakon adults and children walked into the sacrificial flames. The babies, left behind, died of starvation.
He could have interfered — and done what? A being can more easily be killed than made to live. But he knew he would carry the memory with him to the end of time.
Present conditions offered few clues as to that violent end. The universe seemed peaceful, moving toward a quietus that, if it came at all, suggested not a bang but a whimper. The blue shift was more pronounced, but still it seemed innocuous. Not observation but physics and abstract mathematics promised the final fiery doom, certain and implacable and unavoidable.
Drake forced himself away from introspection. There was a job to be done. He must collect, store, and organize information. He must remain intact and integrated and keep in touch with all of his myriad components. Computation power grew linearly with the number of units; coordination problems grew exponentially.
As time went on communication itself became easier. He soon realized why: The universe was shrinking. Contact between far-separated elements was easier. Increased problems of coordination more than cancelled that gain. He found himself scrambling, working nonstop and harder than ever to hold a single focus and a single goal.
Words, theories, that was all they were. They had no basis in reality.
Except that finally, after a span so great that it was easy to believe that it could never happen, an end seemed in sight. The long downward curve steepened. The cosmos was shrinking faster — noticeably faster. Work for Drake became a frenzy, a blur of action. Energy densities were running higher. Information transfer was faster, over diminishing distances. Processes could proceed more rapidly.
And then more rapidly yet.
The microwave radiation was microwave frequencies no longer. It had shortened to visible wavelengths. The space between the stars crackled with energy.
But midnight was approaching. Time moved on. The sky was falling, imploding toward its final singularity, and the firmament had become a continuous actinic glare when Drake became aware of a new presence, a different voice speaking from among his endless sea of selves.
It emerged from the white noise that formed the edge of Drake’s consciousness and steadily approached his central coordinating nexus. He did not know where it had come from, but as it neared it seemed to touch and merge with every one of his components. It interrupted the rhythm of his frantic work, and as such it was dangerous. Somehow he must stop its action.
He reached out toward it. Even before full contact was established, there was a curious exchange of energies like a fleeting touch of fingertips. It destroyed his processing powers. All his work froze, and in the same moment he sensed who it might be.
A mixture of emotions — hope, joy, fear, longing, love — spread through his extended self and thrilled him with wild surmise.
“Ana?”
“Who else?”
“But where did you come from? Can you be real? I mean, to just appear …”
“We’ve really got to stop meeting like this, eh? I certainly
“You are not a simulation.” Drake hated the suggestion that Ana might not be real, even though it had come from him. “You can’t be. Don’t you think I would know if I was creating a simulation?”
“You might. But maybe you have powers that you don’t know about. Mm. That doesn’t sound consistent with being omniscient, does it? Let’s put it another way, with a question: Is self-deception possible, even for an omniscient being?”
“I don’t know.” The gentle touch had come again, closer and more intimate. “All I can say is it doesn’t
“All right, let’s avoid an argument by agreeing that I’m here and I’m real. So before I do anything else, let me say thank you. Now I have another question. How much time do we have?”
She had always been the practical one, the clear-eyed realist, raising issues that Drake was happy to push under the rug. And as usual she was asking the right question.
Drake looked beyond himself, to the universe that he had been ignoring. It roared and blazed with energy. The cosmic background had become as bright as the stars around which most of the composites clustered. And still the pace of collapse was accelerating, rushing giddily on to the final singularity.
“We have a few more years of proper time, at most, before the final singularity.” He found it impossible to worry. Ana was with him, never again would she leave him.
“Is that all?” The visual construct that she had chosen was her old self, and she was frowning. “Just a few years? I mean, it’s more than I ever expected, but it’s not much of a return on investment for
“I had it easy. It’s enough. We’ll stretch it subjectively. We can run multispeed in electronic mode and make it seem as long as we want.”
“But it won’t be
“Ana, you’re talking about the end of the universe.” Drake laughed, delirious with happiness. He could feel music swelling inside him, for the first time in aeons. “It’s the end of everything. The Omega Point. Finis. There’s no